Institution | Hits | Years | AIAS | Five million plus | 2003 to date | Tulane chemistry | 80.934 | 1998 to date | Bonaventure physics | 9,601 | 2001 to date | Madison physics | 24,027 | 2003 to date | Syracuse physics | 31,525 | Several | Brigham Young physics students | 11,000 | 2003 to date | Colgate physics and astronony | 69,712 | Several | Groningen computational physics | 77,648 | 1998 to present | British Columbia Institute of Tech | 82,934 | 2000 to present | Bristol Univ., School of Chemistry(5*) | 2,621,606 | 1996 to present | UNC Asheville, chemistry | 62,124 | 2000 to present | Penn State Winograd Group (physics) | 23,915 | 2003 to present | Univ Copenhagen, chemistry | 5,105 | 2004 to present | UM Kansas City, chemistry | 33,252 | Several | Polomar Univ Cal., chemistry | 25,076 | 1998 to present | La Salle Univ,m Philadelphia | 7,586 | 2000 to present | Notes: The above table shows that the impact being made by the two AIAS sites (www.aias.us and www.atomicprecision.com) is a hundred to a thousand times greater than the average good department in academia over the same time span of a few years. The impact being made by AIAS is regularly checked in great detail for quality (see feedback files on www.aias.us) and there is no doubt that AIAS is the highest impacting chemical physics institution in the world, both in terms of quality and quantity. This impact can be measured in many ways, here it is restricted to files downloaded (‘hits”) in order to make a comparison as in the table. I will go on researching more university feedback sites where I can find them, but the pattern is already stunningly clear. British Civil List Scientist 7 July 2007
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